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Dive into the research topics where Saara Pentikäinen is active.

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Featured researches published by Saara Pentikäinen.


Appetite | 2014

Enrichment of biscuits and juice with oat β-glucan enhances postprandial satiety.

Saara Pentikäinen; Leila Karhunen; Laura Flander; Kati Katina; Alexandra Meynier; Pierre Aymard; Sophie Vinoy; Kaisa Poutanen

Effects of fibre and β-glucan on satiety have been reported in many studies, but no consensus has been reached. The aim of this study was to examine the effects of breakfasts varying in the dose of oat bran (4g or 8g β-glucan). The approach was to study whether the food matrix (solid or liquid) into which the oat bran is incorporated influences postprandial satiety in otherwise similar meal settings. Thirty healthy females were offered four different breakfasts: biscuits+juice (0g β-glucan), enriched biscuits+juice (4g β-glucan), biscuits+enriched juice (4g β-glucan) and enriched biscuits+enriched juice (8g β-glucan) in a random order on separate test days. The sensations associated with hunger and satiety were evaluated using visual analogue scales (VAS) before and after ingesting the test breakfasts and every 30min until 210min. Oat bran addition in breakfasts increased postprandial satiety especially when both juice and biscuits were enriched (8g of β-glucan). Addition of oat bran to juice enhanced satiety and related feelings more effectively than the addition into biscuits.


Public Health Nutrition | 2011

The quality of school lunch consumed reflects overall eating patterns in 11-16-year-old schoolchildren in Finland.

Tanja Tilles-Tirkkonen; Saara Pentikäinen; Jenni Lappi; Leila Karhunen; Kaisa Poutanen; Hannu Mykkänen

OBJECTIVE To explore how the quality of school lunch consumed reflected overall eating patterns in school-aged children. DESIGN Children filled in an Internet-based questionnaire about their eating patterns. The children were then divided into balanced and imbalanced school lunch eaters on the basis of their responses in the questionnaire. A balanced school lunch consisted of, by the definition used in the present study, a main dish, salad and bread. SETTING Eleven primary schools and one middle school in eastern Finland. SUBJECTS A total of 531 schoolchildren (247 boys and 284 girls) aged 11-16 years. RESULTS The school lunch was balanced in 46·5% of children. Eating a balanced school lunch was associated with overall healthier eating patterns outside school. Children who ate a balanced school lunch had more regular meal times and consumed healthier snacks. They ate fruit or berries and vegetables, dairy products and wholegrain foods more often, consumed fewer salty snacks, pizzas, meat pies and drank fewer soft drinks and energy drinks. Their eating patterns at home were also healthier, with vegetables being offered at every family dinner and fruit being offered daily, whereas soft drinks were offered seldom. CONCLUSIONS The choices made by children in their school lunch reflect the overall eating patterns among school-aged children. Eating a balanced school lunch is associated with more regular meal patterns, the availability of healthier foods at home and an overall healthier diet, suggesting that healthy eating patterns are learnt at home.


The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition | 2017

A review of the characteristics of dietary fibers relevant to appetite and energy intake outcomes in human intervention trials

Kaisa Poutanen; Pierre Dussort; Alfrun Erkner; Susana Fiszman; Kavita Karnik; Mette Kristensen; Cyril F M Marsaux; Sophie Miquel-Kergoat; Saara Pentikäinen; Peter Putz; Joanne L. Slavin; Robert E. Steinert; David Jason Mela

Background: Many intervention studies have tested the effect of dietary fibers (DFs) on appetite-related outcomes, with inconsistent results. However, DFs comprise a wide range of compounds with diverse properties, and the specific contribution of these to appetite control is not well characterized.Objective: The influence of specific DF characteristics [i.e., viscosity, gel-forming capacity, fermentability, or molecular weight (MW)] on appetite-related outcomes was assessed in healthy humans.Design: Controlled human intervention trials that tested the effects of well-characterized DFs on appetite ratings or energy intake were identified from a systematic search of literature. Studies were included only if they reported 1) DF name and origin and 2) data on viscosity, gelling properties, fermentability, or MW of the DF materials or DF-containing matrixes.Results: A high proportion of the potentially relevant literature was excluded because of lack of adequate DF characterization. In total, 49 articles that met these criteria were identified, which reported 90 comparisons of various DFs in foods, beverages, or supplements in acute or sustained-exposure trials. In 51 of the 90 comparisons, the DF-containing material of interest was efficacious for ≥1 appetite-related outcome. Reported differences in material viscosity, MW, or fermentability did not clearly correspond to differences in efficacy, whereas gel-forming DF sources were consistently efficacious (but with very few comparisons).Conclusions: The overall inconsistent relations of DF properties with respect to efficacy may reflect variation in measurement methodology, nature of the DF preparation and matrix, and study designs. Methods of DF characterization, incorporation, and study design are too inconsistent to allow generalized conclusions about the effects of DF properties on appetite and preclude the development of reliable, predictive, structure-function relations. Improved standards for characterization and reporting of DF sources and DF-containing materials are strongly recommended for future studies on the effects of DF on human physiology. This trial was registered at http://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO as CRD42015015336.


Food Research International | 2017

Effects of structural and textural properties of brittle cereal foams on mechanisms of oral breakdown and in vitro starch digestibility

Syed Ariful Alam; Saara Pentikäinen; Johanna Närväinen; Ulla Holopainen-Mantila; Kaisa Poutanen; Nesli Sozer

Structural and textural properties as well as the dietary fibre content of solid cereal foams influence the oral breakdown of structure, bolus formation and digestibility. The aim of this study was to investigate how structural differences of solid cereal foams (puffs vs. flakes) affect in vivo chewing and in vitro starch digestion. Four extruded puffs and flakes were produced from endosperm rye flour by extrusion processing without or with 10% rye bran (RB) addition. Extruded puffs and flakes were masticated by fifteen healthy females and the process was monitored using electromyography. Extruded puffs were more porous than flakes (97% vs 35%). The two products were also significantly different (p<0.05) in their structural and textural properties such as expansion, hardness, density and crispiness. A negative correlation was observed between hardness and crispiness index (p<0.05, r=-0.950) and density and porosity (p<0.05, r=-0.964). Addition of 10% RB had a significant effect on structural, textural and mastication properties both for puffs and flakes. Mastication of puffs required less total work than flakes (204 vs. 456%) and they were degraded to smaller particles than flakes during mastication. Irrespectively of the considerable differences in structure, texture and oral disintegration process, no significant (p<0.05) differences were observed between puffs and flakes (86.4 vs. 85.1) in terms of starch hydrolysis index. RB addition increased the hydrolysis index of puffs and flakes to 89.7 and 94.5, respectively, which was probably attributable to the increased number of particles in the bolus.


Food Chemistry | 2019

Mastication-induced release of compounds from rye and wheat breads to saliva

Saara Pentikäinen; Marjukka Kolehmainen; Kaisa Poutanen; Kati Hanhineva; Anna-Marja Aura

Mastication initiates digestion, disintegrating food structure and mixing it with saliva. This study aimed to provide understanding about the first step of bread digestion by exploring release of compounds from bread matrix during mastication. Furthermore, the aim was to identify compound groups that differentiate rye and wheat breads. Fifteen participants masticated whole-meal rye bread, endosperm rye bread, endosperm rye bread with added gluten and wheat bread. The masticated samples were studied with non-targeted LC-MS metabolic profiling. A great number of compounds were released from bread matrices in mastication, and the identified compounds differed largely between bread types. Specifically, rye bread samples were characterized by a greater release of peptides and amino acids, whereas sugars and nucleosides were characteristic for wheat bread. These compounds could potentially act as signal molecules in the alimentary tract and may explain, at least partly, the postprandial physiological effects of the breads identified in earlier studies.


The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition | 2018

Recommendations for characterization and reporting of dietary fibers in nutrition research

Kaisa Poutanen; Susana Fiszman; Cyril F M Marsaux; Saara Pentikäinen; Robert E. Steinert; David J. Mela

ABSTRACT Dietary fiber (DF) comprises a wide range of naturally occurring and modified materials with substantial variations in physical and chemical properties and potential physiologic effects. Although nutrition studies testing the effects of DF usually provide extensive detail on the physiologic responses, many still fail to adequately report the type and properties of the DF itself. This weakens the ability to directly replicate and compare studies and to establish structure-function relations. We outline the factors that affect DF functionality and provide 4 overarching recommendations for the characterization and reporting of DF preparations and DF-containing foods in nutrition research. These relate to 1) undertaking characterization methods that reflect the study hypothesis; 2) adequate reporting of DF source, quantity, and composition; 3) measurement of DF rheological properties; and 4) estimation of the DF fermentation rate and extent. Importantly, the food matrix of the test products should also be considered, because this can influence DF functionality and hence the apparent DF efficacy for health-relevant outcomes. Finally, we point out differences in DF functionality to be considered in acute and longer-term trials, the need to design the control treatment according to the research question, and the importance of reporting the amount and type of DF in the background diet.


Molecular Nutrition & Food Research | 2018

Investigation of Variations in the Human Urine Metabolome amongst European Populations: An Exploratory Search for Biomarkers of People at Risk-of-Poverty

Alessia Trimigno; Bekzod Khakimov; Francesco Savorani; Leonardo Tenori; Vaiva Hendrixson; Alminas Čivilis; Marija Glibetić; Mirjana Gurinovic; Saara Pentikäinen; Janne Sallinen; Sara Garduno Diaz; Francesca Pasqui; Santosh Khokhar; Claudio Luchinat; Alessandra Bordoni; Francesco Capozzi; Søren Balling Engelsen

SCOPE According to Eurostat 2016, approximately 119 million European citizens live at-risk-of-poverty (ROP). This subpopulation is highly diverse by ethnicity, age, and culture in the different EU states, but they all have in common a low income that could represent an increased risk of nutrient deficiencies due to poor nutritional habits. This study aims to investigate the human urine metabolome in the search of common biomarkers representing dietary deficiencies amongst European populations at ROP. METHODS AND RESULTS 2732 urine samples were collected from 1391 subjects across five different European countries, including the United Kingdom, Finland, Italy, Lithuania, and Serbia, and analyzed using 1 H-NMR spectroscopy. The resulting urine metabolome data were explored according to study design factors including economic status, country, and gender. CONCLUSION Partitioning of the effects derived from the study design factors using ANOVA-simultaneous component analysis (ASCA) revealed that country and gender effects were responsible for most of the systematic variation. The effect of economic status was, as expected, much weaker than country and gender, but more pronounced in Lithuania than in other countries. Citrate and hippurate were among the most powerful ROP biomarkers. The possible relationship between these markers and nutritional deficiencies amongst the ROP population is discussed.


Food Research International | 2014

Effects of wheat and rye bread structure on mastication process and bolus properties

Saara Pentikäinen; Nesli Sozer; Johanna Närväinen; Saara Ylätalo; Pekka Teppola; Jukka S. Jurvelin; Ulla Holopainen-Mantila; Riitta Törrönen; Anna-Marja Aura; Kaisa Poutanen


Packaging Technology and Science | 2015

European Consumers' Perceptions of Time-Temperature Indicators in Food Packaging: EUROPEAN CONSUMERS AND TIME-TEMPERATURE INDICATORS IN FOOD PACKAGING

Kyösti Pennanen; Caralampo Focas; Vilja Kumpusalo-Sanna; Kaisu Keskitalo-Vuokko; Imke Matullat; Mariem Ellouze; Saara Pentikäinen; Maria Smolander; Virpi Korhonen; Margareetta Ollila


Packaging Technology and Science | 2016

Note: European Consumers’ Perceptions of Time–Temperature Indicators in Food Packaging

Kyösti Pennanen; Caralampo Focas; Vilja Kumpusalo-Sanna; Kaisu Keskitalo-Vuokko; Imke Matullat; Mariem Ellouze; Saara Pentikäinen; Maria Smolander; Virpi Korhonen; Margareetta Ollila

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Kaisa Poutanen

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland

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Johanna Närväinen

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland

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Nesli Sozer

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland

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Kyösti Pennanen

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland

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Leila Karhunen

University of Eastern Finland

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Syed Ariful Alam

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland

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Ulla Holopainen-Mantila

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland

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Anna-Marja Aura

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland

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Maria Smolander

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland

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Marjukka Kolehmainen

University of Eastern Finland

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